Four $240,000 New Jersey Sire Stakes finals for 2-year-olds were the headline events on Friday night's program at the Meadowlands. In the colt and gelding trot, Oh Well (Tim Tetrick) took command from first-over heading to the 1:25 3/5 three-quarters and went on to win in 1:53 1/5. Up Your Deo (Ake Svanstedt) closed well in the lane to finish second, just three-quarters of a length behind Oh Well, but was placed ninth after the judges deemed he caused interference to other horses on the first turn. That elevated Point Of Perfect (Joe Bongiorno) to second and Celebrity Bambino (Yannick Gingras) to third. "He's only going to get better, I think. He covers too much ground not to be a nice horse," said Tetrick. "He raced really good, and he keeps putting his nose out front." Marcus Melander trains Oh Well, a Muscle Hill-Fine Tuned Lady colt bred by Concord Stud Farm, for owner S R F Stable. Oh Well, who was purchased for $530,000 at last year's Standardbred Horse Sale, has put together a record of 2-1-0 from three starts thus far, has pocketed $142,500, and paid $5.40 to win as the favorite. Ucandoit Blue Chip (Scott Zeron) brushed out of fourth in the backstretch, took command at the 55 3/5 half, repelled a bid by Devilish Dreams (Andy McCarthy) going to the 1:25 1/5 three-quarters, and drew off to win the filly pace by 3 1/2 lengths in 1:52, completing a sweep of the series. Lisa Lane (Patrick Ryder) was next, followed by Get Answers (Dexter Dunn). Unfortunately, this race was marred by Fox Valley Adele (Marcus Miller) falling past the half while sitting the pocket. While Miller was uninjured and able to continue driving on the card, Fox Valley Adele suffered either a heart attack or an aneurysm and died. A daughter of Keystone Velocity-Molly Can Do It bred by Blue Chip Bloodstock Inc., Ucandoit Blue Chip has three wins and a second in four starts for trainer Linda Toscano and owner Bill Elliott. A $32,000 buy a year ago at the Standardbred Horse Sale, Ucandoit Blue Chip has banked $161,993, and returned $2.60 to win as the 1-5 choice. "What a good girl. [Zeron] never popped the plugs, so I'm pretty happy with her," remarked Toscano. The filly trot saw Walner Payton (Dunn) grab the lead from Quick Stop (Todd McCarthy) after the 28 2/5 opening quarter, and Walner Payton remained on top from there, scoring by a length and a quarter in 1:54 1/5. Mambacita (David Miller) was the runner-up and Bubzarellie (Zeron) took third. "She's been very good. She was a little tough to break, but we got away with that okay," stated winning trainer Chris Ryder. "She's always trained well. She's a very willing filly and just been pretty straightforward. "We're really happy with her." Walner Payton is a Walner-Lonely Lady filly bred by Steve Stewart and Douglass Hutchins and owned by Ken Jacobs. Acquired for $510,000 at the 2021 Lexington Selected Yearling Sale, Walner Payton has produced a pair of victories and a third-place finish, has earned $138,600, and paid $7.80 to win as the 5-2 second choice. ► Sign up for our FREE DRF Harness Digest Newsletter The colt and gelding pace saw Voukefalas (Jordan Stratton) move to the lead after the 26 4/5 opening quarter, rebuff a bid by pocket-sitter Lifes A Puzzle (Tetrick) heading to the 1:22 3/5 three-quarters, and then pace home in 27 2/5 to prevail by 2 3/4 lengths in 1:50, making him the fastest freshman in the sport so far in 2022. Handlelikeaporsche (Dunn) out-footed Lifes A Puzzle to take runner-up honors. "We needed it tonight, and he proved exactly what I thought about him," offered Michael Russo, who trains Voukefalas for owner/breeder Michael Pagonas. By Lazarus and out of the Cams Fortune mare Inittowinafortune, Voukefalas broke his maiden in his third attempt after finishing in the third spot in both of the preliminary legs. He has now stashed away $127,200 and returned $6.20 to win as the 2-1 second choice. One $20,000 consolation event was also held, for colt and gelding trotters, and the winner was D'Apper (by Walner and bred by Steve Stewart and John Bootsman) in 1:54 2/5 for Tetrick, trainer Lucas Wallin, and owner Quite The Dapper.